The One Surprising Benefit of a Daily Action Plan

If you reduce the aim, make it smaller, and commit to a shorter timeframe, it works.

Take this blog post, for example. Since March, I’ve written two posts. That’s all.

Why?

I decided to write posts of at least 1000 words. Mega-posts, Wikipedia style. And I did start about a dozen of them. But none are ready for publishing. There’s gaps here and there. So, nothing has been published.

Tonight, I decided a different tactic. Write for 30 min, no more, then stop. Whatever we get in that 30 minutes goes online. So far I have wrote 209 words in 15 minutes. Not great but it’s something.

It’s a starting point.

You see, my goal isn’t to write for the sake of it. It’s to kick start the process. Reducing the aim – changing my approach – has allowed me to clear the decks for half an hour and get into the groove again.

I suspect that if I can keep this up for two weeks, I’ll start writing longer and more frequently.

So, here’s how I see it if you want to create a daily action plan:

Identify one goal. Make it as atomic as possible. One specific task.

Set a time when you will perform this task, for example, for me it’s 8 pm every evening.

Set a timeframe for this goal. In this case, I want to write every second night for two weeks.

Reward yourself.

Resist the temptation to increase the goal when things are going well. That’s a trap. Ask any jogger. You go running, feel great, and push on for an extra 5k. Next day you’re injured and out for a week or more.

If I could add one more thing it would be to perform your action plan as early in the day as possible.

For me, my willpower is strongest in the morning.

After a day in the office, after dealing with the kids, after… it doesn’t have the same resilience.